Furoshiki Patchin: Black Walnut
Furoshiki Patchin: Black Walnut
Musubi
A furoshiki becomes a bag with one part: two corners of the cloth threaded through a patchin and knotted, the knot disappearing into the wood itself. What's left looks less like a cloth improvised into a bag than a bag that happens to be cloth. The wood does the work.
Musubi turns this clasp from black walnut - dense and dark-grained, heavy enough to hold a knot without any hardware to fail.
The large is sized for furoshiki between 70 and 115cm: room enough for a bottle, a bound book, a day's shopping.
The mini size is for cloths between 45 and 70cm: a lunch box, a wine bottle, a small pouch.
Made in Japan by Musubi.
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About the maker
Furoshiki is older than any explanation for why it still exists. The Shosoin Treasure House in Nara has kept furoshiki in storage since it opened in 756 - cloth used to wrap and carry, unchanged in purpose for nearly thirteen centuries. In 1937, when Kyoto's Yamada Kanshichi Store first opened, furoshiki was still ordinary. Students carried their textbooks in it. People carried whatever else wouldn't fit in a bag.
The store became Yamada Sen-i, and the Yamada family has run it since: Koichi Yamada from 1966, his son Yoshio from 2003. In between, furoshiki stopped being ordinary - zippers and suitcases made it optional in a way it had never been. Musubi's response was not to freeze the cloth as heritage but to keep asking what else it could do: reversible dyeing that gives one square two patterns, water-repellent weaves, collaborations with the textile house minä perhonen, the artist Masaru Suzuki, the illustrator Adeline Klam. The techniques changed. The cloth did not.
Recent work is in organic cotton and recycled polyester as well as the old weaves. Furoshiki from the Kyoto workshop has been shown at the Tropenmuseum in Amsterdam and installed in front of Paris City Hall - a piece of cloth for wrapping things, still travelling.
